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The Currency Cold War - Cash and Cryptography, Hash Rates and Hegemony (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R571
Discovery Miles 5 710
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The Currency Cold War - Cash and Cryptography, Hash Rates and Hegemony (Hardcover)
Series: Perspectives
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Loot Price R571
Discovery Miles 5 710
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The way that money works now is a blip. It's a temporary
institutional arrangement agreed in response to specific political,
technological and economic circumstances. As these circumstances
change, so money must change. Many people think that it will
undergo a pretty significant change in the very near future and we
need to start planning for the coming era of digital currency. The
historian Niall Ferguson wrote in 2019 that "if America is smart,
it will wake up and start competing for dominance in digital
payments". Competing for this new currency dominance could mean a
new cold war in cyberspace with, for example, Facebook's private
currency facing off against China's public currency facing off
against a digital euro. Or would a digital dollar win this new
space race? This is not just the concern of wide-eyed technologists
obsessed with Bitcoin. In a 2019 speech the governor of the Bank of
England said that a form of global digital currency could be "the
answer to the destabilising dominance of the US dollar in today's
global monetary system". But which digital currency? Will we really
be choosing between the Federal Reserve and Microsoft (between
dollar bills and Bill's dollars)? Or between Facebook's Libra and
the Chinese Digital Currency/Electronic Payment system "DC/EP"?
Between spendable SDRs and Kardashian Kash? It would be a mistake
to see this as a technical debate about cryptocurrencies and
blockchains, about hash rates and key lengths. It matters far
beyond the virtual boundaries of the new age. The dollar's
dominance gives America the ability to exert soft power through the
International Monetary and Financial System. A serious implication
of replacing existing monetary arrangements with new infrastructure
based on digital currency is that this power might be constrained.
How might America respond to losing its hegemony? Now that the
technologists, the business strategists, the economists and the
national and international regulators are beginning to glance in
the direction of these alternatives, the whole topic of digital
currency needs to be explored. In this book, industry expert David
Birch sets out the economic and technological imperatives,
discusses the potential impact, and highlights a series of
tensions-between public and private and, most importantly, between
East and West-to contribute to the high-level debate that we must
have to begin to shape the International Monetary and Financial
System financial system of the near future.
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